The Tattoos You'd get in a Soviet-era Prison (OC)

If you were in a Soviet-era prison about oh, say 50 years ago, you’d have tattoos. A lot of them. But not just any tattoos, particular designs that were symbolic, that showed off your cred, and other interesting personal facts.
Tattoo artists were called “prickers”. They were in such high demand that prisoners would transfer into certain prisons just to be near a good artist

Images of a church or monastery meant that the person was a thief

The number of steeples on the church indicated the number of convictions.

Like a LinkedIn profile, those tattoos would show your “achievements.”

Real criminals got eyes tattooed on the chest. It meant they were a senior criminal

The eyes said, “I’m watching you.” Eyes on the lower abdomen suggested “homosexual” because the genitalia looked like a nose beneath the eyes, forming a “face”.

A sailing ship tattoo meant that the owner is not committed to normal work

He’s a traveling thief, and likely to escape.

A professional criminal wore two 8-pointed stars, just below the collar bones

Stars on the knees showed a hate for authority, meaning, “I bow to no one.”

A bracelet tattoo on the wrist meant the owner had spent over 5 years in prison

Little crosses tattooed on the knuckles were tallies for trips to the “zone,” a.k.a. a prison or labor camp.

Erotic tattoos were shaming tattoos

These images were meant for prisoners who’d lost a card game, collaborated with the authorities, or broke a gang’s code of honor.

A tattoo of a skull with a knife through it signified that the person was a murderer

If a guy had a knife tattooed like it was stabbed through his throat, it meant not only that he killed someone, but also that he was a killer looking for work.

Having a tattoo of Lenin or Stalin over your chest or vital organs could protect you

It was believed that prison guards would not shoot an image of a revered leader.